"Must a people disappear for us to know they exist?" -- Mano Dayak (1949-1995)

In Recognition of the Genocide

This website is dedicated to the hundreds and thousands of Tuareg men, women, and children, including many whole families, who have suffered and died over the past several decades, as a result of the deliberate exclusionary practicesthat have deprived the Tuaregs of critically needed food relief, medical care, and development. Governments have sought to silence the Tuaregs' legitimate complaints, through intimidation, arrests, rape, torture, extrajudicial execution and massacres, and to isolate them from the media and from humanitarian aid. HERE IS A TRIBUTE to the Tuareg people who have bravely continued to struggle for justice. May their voice be heard by the whole World.

Email contact:tuaregcultureandnews *gmail.com

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April 14, 2013

Thousands of Tuareg people have been demonstrating at the Mbera refugee camp in Mauretania, where they fled from the armed conflict in Mali, the racialized hatred, and the atrocities of the Malian army. It has been really hard for them to survive in the Mbera refugee camp, because there is not enough shelter and food for everyone, and the children cannot go to school.

Bamako recently sent representatives to tell the refugees to go back to Mali so they can vote. But the refugees have refused for two reasons: (1) there have been ongoing arrests, torture, and killings by the Malian army of innocent Tuareg civilians, and (2) the elections are not fair - for years, now they have been hijacked by government officials who are in cahoots with the narco-traffickers and jihadists. They also pay people to vote for their candidates. The Tuaregs want democracy and fairness.

The refugees are speaking out about the injustices going back fifty years, and the crimes of the Malian government and army against their relatives and ancestors.

The two boys in the video are asking, "Why is Mali killing our people?" and "Why are Europeans and Arabs and other people free, but not the Tuaregs? Why are we treated differently?" They are saying, "The Kel Tamasheq want freedom and dignity!"

3 Million is probably
the lowest reasonable estimate for total Tuareg populations as of 2013.

Exact figures for Tuareg populations are not available.The national census takers in countries where
Tuaregs live do not classify population by ethnicity.Therefore, all figures for Tuareg
populations are based on estimates.Estimates range from a few hundred thousand to seven million – depending
on what countries and social classes of Tuaregs are included.Many Tuaregs feel that the population
estimates are usually much too low, and anthropologists generally agree that
the estimates are too low.

The Tuareg population has been in flux geographically for
decades, following droughts, conflicts, and political difficulties.Thousands upon thousands of Tuaregs
have died during major droughts, after the governments denied nomads food
relief.Thousands more have died
during conflicts.

Tuaregs live largely in Niger, Mali, Algeria, Libya, and
Burkina Faso - but also in Chad, Mauretania, Morocco, Nigeria, Senegal, Sudan,
Tunisia, and other West African and North African countries, as well as Europe,
the U.S., Canada, and many other countries.

The three major
anthropologists who have written extensive ethnographies of the Tuareg
people are Johannes Nicolaisen, Jeremy Keenan, and Edmond Bernus.They all acknowledge that it is
difficult to estimate the total number of Tuaregs.The estimates below go back decades – and populations have
tripled or quadrupled since the 1960s.

Johannes Nicolaisen, Anthropologist
(1963)

300,000 “free Tuareg” estimated in 1963

Nicolaisen, Johannes.1963.Ecology and Culture of the Pastoral Tuareg.Copenhagen:National Museum.

Edmond Bernus, Anthropologist
(1981)

“Being nomads, they are difficult to count, and census
figures given for them are often underestimated (Bernus 1981:55).”

Estimates range from 300,000 – 3 Million.“[The] difference is largely
accounted for by definitional confusion of ‘who is a Tuareg’:many former slaves and other formerly
subordinate peoples, who still speak the Tuareg language … are often counted as
Tuareg.” (p. 1)

“These … figures … are further complicated by the facts that
many Tuareg, especially in Mali and Niger, have been displaced from their
former homelands following the pressures of droughts and civil wars in the
1980s and 1990s, and … [migration] in search of employment.” (p. 2)
Source:Keenan, Jeremy,2004.Introduction:Indigenous Rights and a Future Politic amongst Algeria’s Tuareg after
Forty Years of Independence.IN:The
Lesser Gods of the Sahara.London:Frank Cass.pp. 1-3

Tuaregs

“The Tuareg
themselves claim to be more than three million.”

[Note:Most Tuaregs include any native speaker
of Temasheq, no matter what nationality or social class.]

“Although their
population of 1.5 million to 3 million spans five countries — Libya, Algeria,
Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso — the Tuareg are barely represented in any of
those countries' capitals.”Oct.
11, 2011

[Note:Many Tuaregs in these countries would
be agro-pastoralists or nomads living in rural areas.]

“The Tuareg
themselves claim to be more than three million. Yet their number has variously
been estimated at some 1.5 to 2 million, with the majority of some 750,000
living in Niger, and 550,000 in Mali. In Algeria they are estimated at 40,000,
excluding some 100,000 refugees from Mali and Niger, and the same number is
officially admitted to live in Burkina Faso. Proper figures are not established
in Libya and other West African francophone countries.”

These numbers are all estimates, and may exclude Tuareg who
are assimilated into the general population of these countries. Niger: 1.4 millionMali: 1.5 million Algeria: 590,000 Burkina Faso: 160,000 Libya: 190,000
Chad: 110.000

“In 1995, the governments of Niger and Mali negotiated a peace deal with Tuareg rebel groups
that ended a six-year rebellion. The deal offered financial incentives and the
broader integration of Tuaregs into positions of importance in the governments
and militaries of both countries, where
two-thirds of the Tuareg population lives, about 3.5 million people.”

[Note:This is
only for Niger and Mali; other countries are excluded.If 2/3 of the Tuareg population = 3.5
Million, then the total Tuareg population would be 5,250,000]

[2 Million in Mali alone]“Northern Tuareg secessionists in Mali, who have already
seized two-thirds of that country — an area larger than France, but with a
mostly-nomad Tuareg population of only two million”